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The Doppler Wind and Temperature Sounder (DWTS) Flight Evaluation and Experiments (TES-16,17)The Doppler Wind and Temperature Sounder instrument (DWTS) developed by Global Atmospheric Technologies and Sciences (GATS) is a simple yet powerful tool with the potential to become a new window through which the study of upper atmosphere dynamics can occur. Based around a defense-grade infrared camera peering through a static gas cell used as a scanning spectral filter, a DWTS instrument can infer wind velocities and kinetic temperatures throughout the stratosphere and lower thermosphere. The DWTS achieves this scanning by measuring the induced Doppler shift and Doppler broadening of emissions as they pass through the DWTS field of view (Gordley, Marshall, 2011). The DWTS holds promise in improving accuracy in weather determination among other terrestrial benefits, and the core technology can be easily adapted to study the dynamics of other planetary atmospheres.

In partnership with GATS, NOAA, and other collaborators, NASA Ames and the Nano-Orbital Workshop (NOW) group have been working to evaluate the DWTS instrument on orbit and optimize it as a flexible payload for nanosatellites. The first mission selected for DWTS technical evaluation is preparing for flight in early 2024, which will be followed by a more capable science mission in 2025, with both missions being part of the TES-n/NOW heritage flight series. The first rapid technology demonstration flight, TES-16/DWTS-A, will demonstrate a single DWTS instrument in an approximately 2U payload volume. With an estimated power consumption of 50 watts, the instrument will maintain the imaging sensor plane at 80K during instrument performance evaluation periods using an integrated Stirling cryocooler. Data from DWTS will be captured and processed via a NOW-designed custom data interface unit before being transmitted via S-band radio back to select ground stations, with instrument command and control maintained via L-band global-coverage radio. The subsequent TES-17/DWTS-B mission will be a dedicated science mission tasked with validating the instrument’s full altitude coverage capabilities, currently estimated from 20 to 200 km during both day and night. This new atmospheric observational capability will come from a single small satellite equipped with three DWTS imagers, each hosting a different gas cell chemistry, to form a complete instrument.

The intention of this flight series, and one of NASA’s interests in this instrument, is not only to advance Earth atmospheric dynamics, but to advance a Martian atmospheric study instrument as well (Colaprete, Gordley, et al) which, if successful, would greatly further understanding of Martian atmospheric dynamics. This document describes the flight series in detail, including challenges facing the TES-16 flight tests and the projected challenges and application of Mars study. Additional detail regarding the possible applications of a Cognitive Communication technique in current flight development by NOW collaborators at the NASA Glenn Research Center is also discussed, including the implications of using an automated User Initiated Service (UIS) protocol to maximize the data collected per orbit.
Document ID
20230011345
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Marcus S. Murbach
(Ames Research Center Mountain View, California, United States)
Lawrence Gordley
(Global Atmospheric Technologies and Sciences)
Joe Gubeli
(Global Atmospheric Technologies and Sciences)
Benjamin T. Marshall
(Global Atmospheric Technologies and Sciences)
Arwen Davé
(Ames Research Center Mountain View, California, United States)
Anthony Colaprete
(Ames Research Center Mountain View, California, United States)
Alejandro J. Salas
(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States) Arlington, Virginia, United States)
Ali Kashani
(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States) Arlington, Virginia, United States)
Kwabena Boateng
(Millennium Engineering and Integration (United States) Arlington, Virginia, United States)
Avery D. Brock
(KBR (United States) Houston, Texas, United States)
Malachi Mooney-Rivkin
(Metis Technology Services Arlington, Virginia, United States)
Stanley M. Krześniak
(Metis Technology Services Arlington, Virginia, United States)
Date Acquired
August 1, 2023
Subject Category
Spacecraft Design, Testing and Performance
Report/Patent Number
SSC23-WV-06
Meeting Information
Meeting: 37th Annual Small Satellite Conference
Location: Logan, UT
Country: US
Start Date: August 5, 2023
End Date: August 10, 2023
Sponsors: Utah State University
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 981698.01.02.21.01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
DWTS Nano-satellite TES-n
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